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It seems safest to put your microwave oven on low power (about 60%), should it have such an option. Otherwise, just multiply all times by 1000/1650, or approximately 0.6; for example, if it says 5 minutes, change that to 3 minutes.
1KW is 1000w. one watt is equals to product of volt and current. current=watt/volt =1000/240 =4.1667 amps
1 watt is equal to 1/1000 kilowatts. To convert a value from watts to kilowatts just divide by 1000. To answer the question there is .001 kilowatts in one watt.
If it is 1000 watts then it produces a 1000 watts. A watt is 1 joule/sec.
The watt or kilowatt (1000 watts) for power, volts for potential difference, amps for current
Turn the microwave on for about 5 second, then look, then do it again untill it melts
To my knowledge there is no such a thing as a 1000 volt cooking microwave oven. If you mean 1000 watt then the answer to your question is yes. W = A x V. Presuming that the 15 amp receptacle is on a 120 volt system then the amperage draw on a 1000 watt microwave oven would be A = W/V 1000/120 = 8.3 amps with 6.6 amps to spare.
put it in the microwave for 35 secs (1000 watt).
It seems safest to put your microwave oven on low power (about 60%), should it have such an option. Otherwise, just multiply all times by 1000/1650, or approximately 0.6; for example, if it says 5 minutes, change that to 3 minutes.
1KW is 1000w. one watt is equals to product of volt and current. current=watt/volt =1000/240 =4.1667 amps
Power = (voltage) x (current) = 110 x 5 = 550 wattsIf operated at this level for 1 hour, thenEnergy = (550 watts) x (1 hour) = 550 watt-hours = 0.55 kilowatt-hour.Another AnswerAs microwave ovens don't operate continuously, but in short bursts, it's not really possible to determine an answer to your question without knowing the frequency and duration of these bursts of energy.
No, the current will be too high.
1 kilo Watt = 10^3 (1000) Watts 1 mega Watt = 10^6 (1,000,000) Watts 1000 kilo Watt = 1000*1000 Watts = 1,000,000 Watts = 1 Mega Watt Therefore...1000 kW = 1 MW Hope that helps! ^_^
A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).A Joule is a Watt-second. 2 kilo-watt-hours are 2 x 1000 x 3600 watt-seconds (since kilo means 1000, and an hour has 3600 seconds).
I = P/V = 1,000/120 = 81/3 Amp.
not gega watt ,it is gaga watt , you have to start from 1 watt 1000 watt = 1 k watt 1000 000 = 1 mega watt 1000 000 000 = 1 gaga watt example : your home need 5 k watt = 5000 watt , but this mega watt or gaga watt amount generated from huge turbine s ,to feeding cites needs in electricity demand .
A 1000 watt generator cannot run a 1500 watt ceramic heater without having problems.